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by mkl
584 days ago
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Okay, sounds like different definitions. If you have a single system that can solve any problem any human can, I'd call that ASI, as it's way smarter than any human. It's an extremely high bar, and before we reach it I think we'll have very intelligent systems that can do more than most humans, so it seems strange not to call those AGIs (they would meet the definition of AGI on Wikipedia [1]). [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_general_intelligenc... |
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I don't think that's the popular definition.
AGI = solve any problem any human can. In this case, we've not reached AGI since it can't solve most FrontierMath problems.
ASI = intelligence far surpasses even the smartest humans.
If the definition of AGI has is that it's more intelligent than the average human, you can argue that we already have AGI today. But no one thinks we have AGI today. Therefore, AGI is not Claude 3.5.
Hence, I think the most acceptable definition for AGI is that it can solve any problem any human can.